TracLinks are a fundamental feature of Trac, because they allow easy hyperlinking between the various entities in the system—such as tickets, reports, changesets, Wiki pages, milestones, and source files—from anywhere WikiFormatting is used.

TracLinks are generally of the form type:id (where id represents the
number, name or path of the item) though some frequently used kinds of items
also have short-hand notations.

Note: The wiki:CamelCase form is rarely used, but it can be convenient to refer to
pages whose names do not follow WikiPageNames rules, i.e., single words,
non-alphabetic characters, etc. See WikiPageNames for more about features specific
to links to Wiki page names.

Trac links using the full (non-shorthand) notation can also be given a custom link title like this:

[ticket:1 This is a link to ticket number one] or
[[ticket:1|This is another link to ticket number one]].

TracLinks are a very simple idea, but actually allow quite a complex network of information. In practice, it's very intuitive and simple to use, and we've found the "link trail" extremely helpful to better understand what's happening in a project or why a particular change was made.

But in practice you often won't need to add the ../ prefix to link to a sibling page.
For resolving the location of a wiki link, it's the target page closest in the hierarchy
to the page where the link is written which will be selected. So for example, within
a sub-hierarchy, a sibling page will be targeted in preference to a toplevel page.
This makes it easy to copy or move pages to a sub-hierarchy by renaming without having to adapt the links.

In order to link explicitly to a toplevel Wiki page,
use the wiki:/ prefix. Be careful not to use the / prefix alone, as this corresponds to the #Server-relativelinks syntax and with such a link you will lack the /wiki/ part in the resulting URL. A link such as [../newticket] will stay in the wiki namespace and therefore link to a sibling page.

Link anchors

Hint: when you move your mouse over the title of a section, a '¶' character will be displayed. This is a link to that specific section and you can use this to copy the #... part inside a relative link to an anchor.

To create a link to the first or last occurrence of a term on a page, use a pseudo anchor starting with '#/' or '#?':

[#/Milestone first occurrence of Milestone] or
[#?Milestone last occurrence of Milestone]

Other prefixes can be defined freely and made to point to resources in other Web applications. The definition of those prefixes as well as the URLs of the corresponding Web applications is defined in a special Wiki page, the InterMapTxt page. Note that while this could be used to create links to other Trac environments, there's a more specialized way to register other Trac environments which offers greater flexibility.

This can be seen as a kind of InterWiki link specialized for targeting other Trac projects.

Any type of Trac link can be written in one Trac environment and actually refer to resources in another Trac environment. All that is required is to prefix the Trac link with the name of the other Trac environment followed by a colon. The other Trac environment must be registered on the InterTrac page.

A distinctive advantage of InterTrac links over InterWiki links is that the shorthand form of Trac links (e.g. {}, r, #) can also be used. For example if T was set as an alias for Trac, links to Trac tickets can be written #T234, links to Trac changesets can be written ​[trac 1508].
See InterTrac for the complete details.

Server-relative links

It is often useful to be able to link to objects in your project that
have no built-in Trac linking mechanism, such as static resources, newticket,
a shared /register page on the server, etc.

To link to resources inside the project, use either an absolute path from the project root,
or a relative link from the URL of the current page (Changed in 0.11):

[/newticket Create a new ticket] or [[//newticket|Create a new ticket]]
[/ home] or [[/|home]]

Escaping Links

To prevent parsing of a TracLink, you can escape it by preceding it with a '!' (exclamation mark).

!NoLinkHere.
![42] is not a link either.

Display:

NoLinkHere.
[42] is not a link either.

Parameterized Trac links

Many Trac resources have more than one way to be rendered, depending on some extra parameters. For example, a Wiki page can accept a version or a format parameter, a report can make use of dynamic variables, etc.

Trac links can support an arbitrary set of parameters, written in the same way as they would be for the corresponding URL. Some examples:

wiki:WikiStart?format=txt

ticket:1?version=1

[/newticket?component=module1 create a ticket for module1]

[/newticket?summary=Add+short+description+here create a ticket with URL with spaces]

The following sections describe the individual link types in detail, as well as notes on advanced usage of links.

attachment: links

The link syntax for attachments is as follows:

attachment:the_file.txt creates a link to the attachment the_file.txt of the current object

attachment:the_file.txt:wiki:MyPage creates a link to the attachment the_file.txt of the MyPage wiki page

attachment:the_file.txt:ticket:753 creates a link to the attachment the_file.txt of the ticket 753

Note that the older way, putting the filename at the end, is still supported: attachment:ticket:753:the_file.txt.

If you'd like to create a direct link to the content of the attached file instead of a link to the attachment page, simply use raw-attachment: instead of attachment:.

This can be useful for pointing directly to an HTML document, for example. Note that for this use case, you'd have to allow the web browser to render the content by setting [attachment] render_unsafe_content = yes (see TracIni#attachment-section). Caveat: only do that in environments for which you're 100% confident you can trust the people who are able to attach files, as otherwise this would open up your site to ​cross-site scripting attacks.

comment: links

When you're inside a given ticket, you can simply write e.g. comment:3 to link to the third change comment.
It is possible to link to a comment of a specific ticket from anywhere using one of the following syntax:

comment:3:ticket:123

ticket:123#comment:3 (note that you can't write #123#!comment:3!)

It is also possible to link to the ticket's description using one of the following syntax:

comment:description (within the ticket)

comment:description:ticket:123

ticket:123#comment:description

htdocs: links

Use htdocs:path/to/file to reference files in the htdocs directory of the Trac environment, the web resource directory.

query: links

search: links

ticket: links

alias:bug:

Besides the obvious ticket:id form, it is also possible to specify a list of tickets or even a range of tickets instead of the id. This generates a link to a custom query view containing this fixed set of tickets.

Example:

ticket:5000-6000

ticket:1,150

timeline: links

Links to the timeline can be created by specifying a date in the ISO:8601 format. The date can be optionally followed by a time specification. The time is interpreted as being UTC time, but if you don't want to compute the UTC time, you can specify a local time followed by your timezone offset relative to UTC.

Examples:

timeline:2008-01-29

timeline:2008-01-29T15:48

timeline:2008-01-29T15:48Z

timeline:2008-01-29T16:48+01

timeline:2008-01-29T16:48+0100

timeline:2008-01-29T16:48+01:00

wiki: links

Version Control related links

It should be noted that multiple repository support works by creating a kind of virtual namespace for versioned files in which the toplevel folders correspond to the repository names. Therefore, in presence of multiple repositories, a /path specification in the syntax of links detailed below should start with the name of the repository. If omitted, the default repository is used. In case a toplevel folder of the default repository has the same name as a repository, the latter "wins". One can always access such folder by fully qualifying it (the default repository can be an alias of a named repository, or conversely, it is always possible to create an alias for the default repository, ask your Trac administrator).

For example, source:/trunk/COPYING targets the path /trunk/COPYING in the default repository, whereas source:/projectA/trunk/COPYING targets the path /trunk/COPYING in the repository named projectA. This can be the same file if 'projectA' is an alias to the default repository or if '' (the default repository) is an alias to 'projectA'.

source: links

aliases:browser:, repos:

The default behavior for a source:/some/path link is to open the browser in that directory directory
if the path points to a directory or to show the latest content of the file.

It's also possible to link directly to a specific revision of a file like this:

source:/some/file@123 - link to the file's revision 123

source:/some/file@head - link explicitly to the latest revision of the file

If the revision is specified, one can even link to a specific line number:

source:/some/file@123#L10

source:/tag/0.10@head#L10

Finally, one can also highlight an arbitrary set of lines:

source:/some/file@123:10-20,100,103#L99 - highlight lines 10 to 20, and lines 100 and 103, and target line 99

or without version number (the @ is still needed): source:/some/file@:10-20,100,103#L99. Version can be omitted when the path is pointing to a source file that will no longer change (like source:/tags/...), otherwise it's better to specify which lines of which version of the file you're talking about

Note that in presence of multiple repositories, the name of the repository is simply integrated in the path you specify for source: (e.g. source:reponame/trunk/README). (since 0.12)

export: links

To force the download of a file in the repository, as opposed to displaying it in the browser, use the export link. Several forms are available:

export:/some/file - get the HEAD revision of the specified file

export:123:/some/file - get revision 123 of the specified file

export:/some/file@123 - get revision 123 of the specified file

This can be very useful for displaying XML or HTML documentation with correct stylesheets and images, in case that has been checked in into the repository. Note that for this use case, you'd have to allow the web browser to render the content by setting [browser] render_unsafe_content = yes (see TracIni#browser-section), otherwise Trac will force the files to be downloaded as attachments for security concerns.

If the path is to a directory in the repository instead of a specific file, the source browser will be used to display the directory (identical to the result of source:/some/dir).

log: links

The log: links are used to display revision ranges. In its simplest form, it can link to the latest revisions of the specified path, but it can also support displaying an arbitrary set of revisions.

log:/ - the latest revisions starting at the root of the repository

log:/trunk/tools - the latest revisions in trunk/tools

log:/trunk/tools@10000 - the revisions in trunk/tools starting from revision 10000

log:@20788,20791:20795 - list revision 20788 and the revisions from 20791 to 20795

log:/trunk/tools@20788,20791:20795 - list revision 20788 and the revisions from 20791 to 20795 which affect the given path

There are short forms for revision ranges as well:

[20788,20791:20795]

[20788,20791:20795/trunk/tools]

r20791:20795 (but not r20788,20791:20795 nor r20791:20795/trunk)

Finally, note that in all of the above, a revision range can be written either as x:y or x-y.

In the presence of multiple repositories, the name of the repository should be specified as the first part of the path, e.g. log:repos/branches or [20-40/repos].